GEOLOGIC CLIMATE RECORDS
UTIG researchers obtain geologic records of climate on annual, suborbital
(10-to-100-year), orbital (1000 - to -10,000-year) and tectonic (greater than
100,000-year) time scales.
Active Projects
* Depositional Cyclicity, Canterbury Basin
* Gulf Intraslope Basins Project (GIB)
* Holocene/Deglacial Abrupt Climate Change and Variability of the Western Pacific Warm Pool
* Seismic Profiling of Rapidly Subsiding Reefs on Sabine Bank, Vanuatu: Preparing for a Future Opportunity to Drill Ancient Reefs Representing Off-Peak and Lowstand Sea Levels During MIS 2-5
* Western Divide West Antarctic Ice Cores (WAISCORES) Site Selection
Previous Projects
* Dynamics of the West
Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS)
* Temperature History of the WPWP
* Late Quaternary Climate Change and the 14C Timescale
* Ice core research in West Antarctica (WAISCORES)
* ODP Leg 150
* ODP Leg 174A
Donald Blankenship and
David Morse are involved in the WAISCORES Project to select a site for an ice
core to be drilled from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet starting in 2002. This
ice core will provide a detailed, high-resolution record of the WAIS’s role
in global climate change and in the Earth's climate history over a period of
several thousand years.
Jamie Austin, Craig Fulthorpe, and Hilary Olson study marine cores collected by
the ODP and data from seismic surveys to decipher the record of sea-level
fluctuations on time scales greater than 100,000 years.
The PLATES Project,
led by Lawrence
Lawver and Ian Dalziel,
reconstructs Earth's tectonic plates and geological environments as far back
in geologic time as one billion years. PLATES' models provide a better
understanding of how large-scale features like the Himalaya Mountains and oceanic
gateways interact with the atmosphere and ocean circulation to influence
climate.
Fred Taylor is
involved in two paleoclimate programs to document the temperature history in
the Western Pacific Warm Pool region of the Pacific Ocean, an area that is
critical to the Earth's climate and weather. One program involves analyzing
cores drilled from living corals to obtain a record of climate extending back
several hundred years; the other involves analyzing cores of fossil corals
from uplifted reefs to obtain climate records for times back through the last
glacial maximum about 22,000 years ago.
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